EMU Presidential Scholarship

$73,600

March 15, 2019

Awards Available:
16

The EMU Presidential Scholarship is only available to incoming freshmen who have competed in the Presidential Scholarship Competition.

Students must complete an EMU Admission Application as well as a separate application for the Competition. These applications are available at high schools beginning each September.

This is a four-year award that pays 30 credit hours per year (15 per semester) of in-state tuition, housing, food allowance and mandatory fees. Awards are based on a competitive exam. To compete, high school seniors must have a minimum 3.5 cumulative GPA with a minimum 25 ACT or 1150 SAT.

For more information, please visit the scholarship provider's website.

Latest College & Financial Aid News

Before joining a group of small private liberal arts institutions that had to close its doors due to financial pressures and falling enrollment, Newbury College encouraged students from defunct Mount Ida College to transfer over. The hope was that the addition of students to Newbury's campus would be enough to allow the school to continue its educational mission. Unfortunately, Newbury has announced it will have to shut-down operations next spring and some students who recently arrived from Mount Ida feel "twice betrayed." [...]

This holiday season, give yourself the best gift a college student can receive: scholarships! What better way to wrap up the year and be financially prepared for next semester than by landing free money for college? If you still need help covering your upcoming tuition bills, these are some of the final scholarships of the year that can help foot the bill. Hurry and apply quick, as all of these scholarships have 2018 deadlines! Take advantage of your winter break by dedicating time to scholarship and grant applications and start next year off with a little less student debt.
[...]

A blind New York resident is suing 50 colleges nationwide over the accessibility of their websites. According to Jason Camacho, the "colleges are in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, as their websites are not accessible to people with disabilities." This is not the first time Camacho has sued higher education institutions over website accessibility. [...]